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We did hold onto our rate-sensitive names like Wells Fargo and Morgan Stanley , which were among the best performers since the last Monthly Meeting. Morgan Stanley: 16.2% Following the Fed's decision, shares advanced as investors became more optimistic about a soft landing for the U.S. economy. Morgan Stanley benefits from lower rates — and, in turn, a better economy — because it can usher in more Wall Street dealmaking such as initial public offerings and mergers and acquisitions. That's because the Club has been debating exiting Morgan Stanley altogether for a potentially better investment banking rebound play like Goldman Sachs. Morgan Stanley reiterated its buy-equivalent rating on Oct. 10, arguing that Eaton has a positive setup into earnings season.
Persons: It's, Wells, Morgan Stanley, Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley's, Salesforce, Marc Benioff, Piper Sandler, Guggenheim, Meta, Eaton, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Angela Weiss Organizations: Dow Jones Industrial, Dow, Procter, Gamble, Meta, Fed, Northland Capital Markets, UBS, Citigroup, Analysts, JPMorgan, Jim Cramer's Charitable, CNBC, Traders, New York Stock Exchange, AFP, Getty Locations: U.S, Wells Fargo, Salesforce, Eaton, Tuesday's, Northland
It may be downhill from here for some high-flying stocks in the Nasdaq. But for some stocks in the Nasdaq, their ascent may soon come to an end. One name on the list was streaming platform service Netflix , which is up 96% in the past year. The stock has rallied roughly 150% this past year, but could potentially fall 7%, according to average analyst estimates. Big-box retailer Costco also made the list, with analysts' price targets suggesting shares could slide 5%.
Persons: David Joyce, Raymond James, Gus Richard, , John Melloy Organizations: Nasdaq, Federal Reserve, CNBC, Stock, Netflix, Seaport Research Partners, Devices, Northland Capital Markets, Costco Locations: Northland
Archer-Daniels-Midland — The food processor's shares dropped more than 22%, making the stock poised for its second worst day in its history back to 1972. Archer-Daniels-Midland announced weak fourth-quarter earnings guidance and placed Chief Financial Officer Vikram Luthar on administrative leave amid an investigation into the company's accounting practices. StoneCo — Shares of the Brazilian payments company rose more than 6% following an upgrade to a buy rating from Goldman Sachs. The financial firm cited an attractive entry point and a constructive outlook on the next freight cycle as catalysts for the change. Vita Coco — The coconut water company tumbled more than 5% after William Blair downgraded shares to market perform from outperform.
Persons: Archer, Vikram Luthar, Goldman Sachs, Trodelvy, Bernstein, Hunt, Gus Richard, Coco, William Blair, — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Alexander Harring, Hakyung Kim, Tanaya Macheel, Pia Singh, Samantha Subin Organizations: Arkhouse Management, Brigade Capital Management, Daniels, Midland, SolarEdge Technologies, Riley, Bloomberg, U.S . Securities, Exchange Commission, Spirit Airlines, JetBlue Airways —, JetBlue, Gilead Sciences, . Union Pacific, Norfolk Southern, UBS, Northland Capital Markets Locations: Brazil, Norfolk, Suez
But elevated expectations for AI chip growth has led Northland Capital Markets analyst Gus Richard to admit that he's not sure where AMD shares should go from here. "We downgrade on valuation to 'a heck if we know' rating," Richard wrote in a note on Monday. Richard's call is based on his view that investor expectations for AI chip growth have spilled into "irrational exuberance." AMD shares fell about 3.5% to $168.17 as of Monday afternoon. Nvidia shares were up less than 1%.
Persons: Lisa Su, , Gus Richard, he's, Richard, Jim Breyer Organizations: AMD, Nvidia, Microsoft, Meta, Northland Capital Locations: Las Vegas , Nevada, Northland, U.S, China
SolarEdge is facing several challenges right now and that could mean a good opportunity for investors, according to Northland Capital Markets. The firm upgraded the Israeli solar stock on Friday to buy from hold and established a price target of $147, which implies about 18% upside from its closing price Thursday. " Solar demand is weak, Israel is at war, an inventory correction, a strong dollar is a headwind, and a competitor pre-announced. It is hard to imagine things could get much worse," Gus Richard, an analyst at Northland Capital Markets, said in a note Friday. SEDG YTD mountain Northland sees about 18% upside in SEDG from current levels.
Persons: Gus Richard, it's, Richard, SolarEdge, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Northland Capital Markets, Energy, Northland Locations: Northland, Israel, Asia, North America
The company reported an adjusted $4.37 per share and $42.4 billion in revenue, while analysts polled by Refinitiv estimated $4 a share and $38.96 billion. Wells reported an adjusted $1.25 per share and $20.53 billion in revenue, while analysts polled by Refinitiv forecasted $1.16 per share and $20.12 billion. Citi -- Citi stock added nearly 2% in premarket trading after beating on earnings. Analysts polled by Refinitiv forecasted $1.30 per share and $19.29 billion. The company reported an adjusted $6.14 per share and $92.9 billion in revenue while analysts polled by Refinitiv forecasted $5.99 and $91 billion.
Persons: JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Wells, Sarah Min Organizations: JPMorgan, Refinitiv, Citi, BlackRock, Northland Capital Markets, Microsoft, UBS, UnitedHealth, Alcoa Locations: New York, U.S, New York's
Solar energy company Sunrun could see its share price double as it grows is residential business, according to Northland Capital Markets. Analyst Abhishek Sinha initiated Sunrun at a $60 price target, which would be a nearly 100% jump from its current price of $30.24. Sinha said the company stands to gain as the residential solar market grows 10% to 15% each year in 2022 and 2023 despite headwinds. "We believe this is just the very beginning of a secular bull market thesis as residential solar should become more widely prevalent greatly benefiting companies like RUN," Sinha said in a note to clients. Sinha cited data from Wood Mackenzie showing solar deployment should increase by 40% over the next few years, further bolstering the expectation of increasing demand .
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